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Isle of jura whiskey review
Isle of jura whiskey review




isle of jura whiskey review isle of jura whiskey review

I am used to Whyte and Mackay tasting sets arriving with sweet treats, due to my participation in Whisky Shop tastings during lockdown. The stunning scenery of the Isle of Jura served as a backdrop on the lid of a box that contained a bottle of Jura 12 Year Old, 5cl of Jura 18, a branded hip flask, a mini painting (since acquired by my kids) and a further unexpected treat. The package I received was certainly well presented. After all, the core range employs all of the things that whisky aficionados rail against: chill filtration, low bottling strength, caramel colouring, and the sense of brightly coloured style over substance. Jura a name that is used in whisky groups as a slur, a whisky that seems to have become the whipping boy of Scotch, the lowest of bars that all other malts are expected to clear, and a distillery that it is fashionable to dislike. I received a parcel of my own the other week, only its contents were quite different in nature to the Diageo Special Releases! Mine came from an island distillery that has been much maligned on this site by writers past and present alike: Jura. All in all, a fairly decent malt, but not necessarily worth the price.Graham isn’t the only Malt contributor who has been sent a whisky promotional pack of late. That said, it doesn’t quite have the depth or strength of other 15 – 18 year olds on the market and the saltiness and spirity wood dominate just a bit too much towards the end. The rough, sour graininess has been replaced by smoother, sweeter notes that make for a deeper, more muscular, more complex dram. Thoughts: This is quite an improvement over the 10 Year Old. The Finish: There’s a lingering sweet earthiness that’s tannic and drying, growing a bit saltier as it fades. Feels a little numbing and hot in the mouth towards the end. A zippy, briney, saltiness grows quickly, followed by deeper, drying, spicy oak notes with ginger, clove and white pepper. The Palate: A syrupy, caramel-y entry, full of toasted bread and candied nuts at first. Soft polished oak notes also seem a touch briney with just a faint hint of the sourness found in the 10 Year Old, tho’ here it’s a more welcome counterpoint to the sweeter notes. Caramel and chocolate covered fruit notes mingle with fresh sawdust and salted nuts. The Nose: Initially, I found this a rather simple nose, but it didn’t take long to open up and reveal a bit more. I keep several bottles of whisky around the house just in case my dad comes back. Either way, distilling was restored, Jura was built, and today they honor this legend by keeping a bottle of Isle of Jura 16 Year Old in that cave, just in case that old ghost comes back thirsty again. The idea that Archie could mistake his wife for a ghost might lead one to believe that maybe Archie was deep into his own stash of illicit hooch…that, or he and his wife didn’t see each other all that often. Archie Campbell finally reaching the end of her teetotalling rope and demanding the Laird lighten up and live a little. My guess is that it probably wasn’t a ghost at all, more likely just Mrs. Having not been visited by ghostly old ladies in my sleep, it’s difficult for me to comment accurately on this legend. At least he did for 29 years until one night in 1810 when a ghostly apparition of an old woman came to him and in what one can only imagine were less than soothing tones, demanded the return of whisky to the thirsty island. It didn’t take much to spook Laird Archie, and since he was also probably pretty tired of not having any booze around himself, he took this as a pretty serious sign to lift the ban on distilling and promptly built the first Jura distillery near a cave in Craighouse. As you might imagine, this didn’t go over too well with the populace, but ol’ Archie was a man of deep conviction and stood firm. *Thanks to the good folks at The Baddish Group for the sample.Īccording to the distillery’s legend, in 1781, Jura’s Laird, one Archibald Campbell, being none too keen on the locals making their own hooch willy-nilly all over the island, enacted a ban on all distilling.






Isle of jura whiskey review